China's
manufacturing growth retreated to an eight-month low in February and slowed for
the third month running, official data showed on Saturday.
China's purchasing
managers' index (PMI) for the manufacturing sector dropped to 50.2 percent in
February, said a statement jointly released by the National Bureau of
Statistics (NBS) and the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing.
The index showed the
manufacturing sector was expanding, but the growth rate was slowing down, said
Zhao Qinghe, a senior analyst with the NBS.
A reading below 50
indicates contraction, while a reading above 50 signals expansion.
"The 50.2 reading
is above the market consensus of 50.1," said Lu Ting, chief China economist
with Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
Zhao attributed the
decline to the Spring Festival holiday, when most companies suspended
production and workers went back home for the week-long holiday.
Lu echoed this view. The
impact the holiday had is further evidenced by the drop in the employment
sub-index to 48.0 percent in February from 48.2 percent in January, despite
employers arguing of a labor shortage after the Spring Festival holiday, Lu said.
In February, the
sub-index for production stood at 52.6 percent, down 0.4 percentage points from
January, while the sub-index for new orders lost 0.4 percentage points to 50.5
percent, said the statement.
Two sub-indexes on
foreign trade both declined. The sub-index for new export orders edged down to
48.2 percent and the import sub-index dropped to 46.5 percent.
In contrast, the
sub-index for production and business expectation climbed to 61.8 percent,
indicating strengthening confidence for future economic growth among
enterprises.
Markets are likely to
respond negatively to the reading but the impact could be limited and policies
are unlikely to be changed by these distorted PMI readings, Lu said.
The news comes after the
depressing HSBC flash manufacturing PMI earlier this month.
The HSBC/Markit China
flash manufacturing PMI for February dipped to 48.3 from a final reading of
49.5 in January, indicating deteriorated manufacturing contraction.
The HSBC flash PMI's
drop could also be attributed to the impact of the holiday in early February as
the index mainly covers smaller enterprises which are influenced more by the
holiday, Lu said.
The months with the
Spring Festival holiday have seen PMI decreases in the past five years, except
in 2012 when the monthly PMI went up from a "periodical" low in the
previous month, according to the NBS statement.
The manufacturing PMI in
the months with the Spring Festival holiday was 52 in 2010, down 3.8 percentage
points month on month; 52.2 in 2011, down 0.7 percentage points month on month;
50.5 in 2012, up 0.2 percentage points month on month; 50.1 in 2013, down 0.3
percentage points month on month; and 50.2 this year down 0.3 percentage points
month on month, according to the statement.
Zhang Liqun, a
researcher with the Development Research Center of the State Council, said
China's economy will remain steady but macro economic policies should be
upgraded to guard against risks.
China's economy expanded
7.7 percent year on year in 2013, above the official target of 7.5 percent.
The government has yet
to announce its 2014 growth target, which analysts widely expect to be set
between 7 percent and 7.5 percent.
News Source: english.cri.cn
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